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Marburg Virus Disease – Symptoms, Treatment, and Prevention.

Definition

Marburg virus disease is a severe disease that causes haemorrhagic fever in humans and animals. Diseases that cause haemorrhagic fevers, such as Marburg, are often fatal as they affect the body’s vascular system (how blood moves through the body). This can lead to significant internal bleeding and organ failure.

Cartoon Representation of Marburg Virus Structure

History

Marburg virus disease (MVD) (formerly known as Marburg haemorrhagic fever) was first identified in 1967 during epidemics in Marburg and Frankfurt in Germany and Belgrade in the former Yugoslavia from importation of infected monkeys from Uganda.

The year was 1967. Several laboratory workers, all from the same lab in Marburg, Germany, were hospitalized with a severe and strange disease. The physicians on staff realized the workers were all suffering from the same ailment, with symptoms that included fever, diarrhea, vomiting, massive bleeding from many different organs, shock, and eventually circulatory system collapse. An investigation began in an attempt to uncover the source of the outbreak. This led to the identification of the source of the virus in Germany: a species of African green monkeys, imported from Uganda, which were being used by the scientists for polio vaccine research. The virus was isolated, and found to exhibit a unique morphology, leading to the designation of a new group: the Filoviridae In that outbreak, a total of 31 human cases were observed, and the disease presented with a 23% mortality rate (7 deaths occurred out of 31 total infections).

Epidemiology

Marburg virus outbreaks that occur sporadically in Africa are characterized by high mortality and a high incidence of nosocomial transmission. The disease it causes is considered a zoonosis that persists in healthy reservoir host (fruit bats) in the endemic areas of Africa, whereas humans and nonhuman primates enter the cycle as spillover hosts with a high rate of fatal outcomes.

After an initial 1967 outbreak in Europe, the virus was not in the focus for eight years when a young Australian travelling throughout Zimbabwe developed similar symptomatology. The largest Marburg hemorrhagic fever outbreak to date occurred in northeastern Angola in the spring of 2005, with over 90 cases and 90% mortality rate.

Primary specific routes of viral spread between humans (but also between other animals and humans) are direct and indirect contact, as well as droplet transmission. Contact with equipment and other objects contaminated with infectious blood or tissues is also a possible way of transmission.

Risk factors

Causes of marburg virus disease

It is not known exactly how humans become infected with the Marburg virus. Recent evidence suggests that humans get the virus through contact with infected animals. Once a person is infected, the virus can spread through person-to-person contact.

Marburg can be spread through:

Symptoms of marburg virus disease

Symptoms can begin 5 to 10 days after exposure. The onset is sudden and the illness advances quickly.

Initial symptoms include:

After 5 – 7 days, additional symptoms include:

Symptoms of Marburg virus disease are similar to those of other viral haemorrhagic fevers, such as Ebola, and of infectious diseases like malaria or typhoid. Diagnosis can be difficult, especially if only a single case is involved.

Some people who get infected with the Marburg virus are able to recover, although it may take a long time. According to the World Health Organization, 25% to 88% of those infected with Marburg virus will die.

Diagnosis and test

Marburg virus infections can be diagnosed definitively only in laboratories, by a number of different tests:

Tests on clinical samples present an extreme biohazard risk and are conducted only under maximum biological containment conditions.

Treatment and medications

There is no specific treatment or vaccine for Marburg virus disease. Patients are treated for their symptoms. Treatment options include:

Prevention of marburg virus disease

Travellers going to affected areas should refrain from visiting households or healthcare settings that have been affected by a Marburg Virus Disease outbreak. Those who care for patients with suspected or confirmed MVD cases should wear protective gowns, gloves, masks, as well as a face shield.

There is currently no preventive medication or vaccine against Marburg Hemorrhagic Fever.

 

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